>>What I'd *like* is for there to be enough atmospheric circulation to keep the "hot pole" not *too* much worse than the deep parts of the Sahara (if it's land). And the cold pole not too much colder than the colder parts of Antarctica.<<
You need at least as deep an atmosphere as Earth, maybe more. Which means you need a planet with enough mass to hold onto that much: this much or bigger/denser.
>> I want global circulation because it'd not only even out the temps a fair bit, it'd also get water transported. <<
Consider adding local features to facilitate that. It would absolutely benefit the biosphere to transfer energy and temperature to modulate the extremes. I would predict for 'terraformers' to emerge in the most temperate region first, which is most likely to happen on a planet whose habitable zone circles the twilight perimeter, and migrate outward from there. On a planet whose habitable area faces the sun, life would probably start at the sunward center, but the margin once colonized would probably become a lively place just because margins tend to do that.
See elsethread my ideas about a dual biosphere where the cold side has its own driver via volcanoes. I don't know how well that would fit your plan.
>> Of course, once you have enough ice at the cold pole it'll flow towards dayside. Unless it gets too cold to flow.<<
... or something else moves it.
>> While Coriolus force will have an effect on the circulation, it will be *much* less than on earth due to the slow rotation of the planet (once a year). <<
True. So instead of weather that changes from day to day, each weather system would act more like a season. That would be more variable in terms of when it could happen, but much less variable once it started. Meaning species would not have a timed trigger but rather a weather event trigger. Cold system = winter = hibernate. Rain = spring = reproduce. Or whatever.
>>I have a scene where someone new to the planet has been outside for *hours* and asks how long it is til sunset. Someone who's been there long says "About three thousand miles. I think the closets part of the terminator is *that* way..." <<
ROFL I love this! You should definitely write it.
>> Of course, I'm having the planet orbit a brown dwarf which throws in a lot of other fun "local color". <<
Can you imagine the reaction if the norm is actually eyeball planets around cooler stars? This place would look insane to them. The sun is broiling hot, the planet is spinning like a berserk top, everything is all messed together, the weather is chaotic, and the light blinks on and off all the time.
I am now tempted to explain Drake's equation that everyone who's come here intending to conquer the place has taken one look at the freakazoid planet and gone "Oh HELL no!" so they all just decided to pretend it doesn't exist while they go about their galactic geopolitics without us.
Thoughts
You need at least as deep an atmosphere as Earth, maybe more. Which means you need a planet with enough mass to hold onto that much: this much or bigger/denser.
>> I want global circulation because it'd not only even out the temps a fair bit, it'd also get water transported. <<
Consider adding local features to facilitate that. It would absolutely benefit the biosphere to transfer energy and temperature to modulate the extremes. I would predict for 'terraformers' to emerge in the most temperate region first, which is most likely to happen on a planet whose habitable zone circles the twilight perimeter, and migrate outward from there. On a planet whose habitable area faces the sun, life would probably start at the sunward center, but the margin once colonized would probably become a lively place just because margins tend to do that.
See elsethread my ideas about a dual biosphere where the cold side has its own driver via volcanoes. I don't know how well that would fit your plan.
>> Of course, once you have enough ice at the cold pole it'll flow towards dayside. Unless it gets too cold to flow.<<
... or something else moves it.
>> While Coriolus force will have an effect on the circulation, it will be *much* less than on earth due to the slow rotation of the planet (once a year). <<
True. So instead of weather that changes from day to day, each weather system would act more like a season. That would be more variable in terms of when it could happen, but much less variable once it started. Meaning species would not have a timed trigger but rather a weather event trigger. Cold system = winter = hibernate. Rain = spring = reproduce. Or whatever.
>>I have a scene where someone new to the planet has been outside for *hours* and asks how long it is til sunset. Someone who's been there long says "About three thousand miles. I think the closets part of the terminator is *that* way..." <<
ROFL I love this! You should definitely write it.
>> Of course, I'm having the planet orbit a brown dwarf which throws in a lot of other fun "local color". <<
That probably aids moderation.
See my observation that Earth is NOT orbiting a best-bet star.
Can you imagine the reaction if the norm is actually eyeball planets around cooler stars? This place would look insane to them. The sun is broiling hot, the planet is spinning like a berserk top, everything is all messed together, the weather is chaotic, and the light blinks on and off all the time.
I am now tempted to explain Drake's equation that everyone who's come here intending to conquer the place has taken one look at the freakazoid planet and gone "Oh HELL no!" so they all just decided to pretend it doesn't exist while they go about their galactic geopolitics without us.